130 Wash. 587 | Wash. | 1924
We will speak of the appellant as though she were the payee of certain notes hereinafter referred to, though in reality she is the administratrix of the estate of the deceased wife of the deceased payee.
The respondents, in 1911, executed and delivered to the appellant two promissory notes, one for $4,900 and the other for $400, both to mature in one year, and this action was commenced in 1923 to recover on these notes. The defense against them is that they are barred by the statute of limitations. In reply to this the appellant relies on a written trust agreement and mortgage made by respondents in 1914, under which
“ . . and this mortgage vests in said trustees, for their own benefit and for such other creditors as may ratify this transaction, full authority to make such extension of time for tbe payment of tbe indebtedness and to make such future advances as in their judgment seems best to tbe interests of all concerned. ’ ’
Tbe appellant accepted tbe terms of tbe agreement. In 1920, tbe two trustees made' a payment of interest to tbe appellant as the bolder of tbe two notes: $360' to apply on tbe larger and $32 on tbe smaller note. Tbe question is, did these payments toll tbe running of tbe statute and revive tbe debt.
Upon this question there seems to be a diversity of opinion in tbe different jurisdictions, but tbe better rule, and tbe one which is indicated by tbe prior de
“It does not follow, however, that he was such an agent of the maker that the payment became the voluntary act of the maker himself, nor that the payment was such an acknowledgment of the existing indebted*590 ness that the law implies a promise to pay the balance. We think it must be considered as an involuntary payment, and that it was not ‘ accompanied by circumstances amounting to an absolute, unqualified acknowledgment of the indebtedness from which a promise may be inferred to pay the remainder.’ ”
Among many opinions to the same effect is the opinion of the supreme court of Michigan in Parsons v. Clark, 59 Mich. 414, 26 N. W. 656, and the supreme court of North Carolina, in Battle v. Battle, 116 N. C. 161, 21 S. E. 177. To the contrary has been cited Bosler v. McShane, 78 Neb. 86, 113 N. W. 998, but we find that the Nebraska court recognizes that it has established a rule contrary to the weight of authority. The Massachusetts courts, in Taylor v. Foster, 132 Mass. 30; and Buffington v. Chase, 152 Mass. 534, 25 N. E. 977, cited by the appellant, were considering cases where the debtor had turned over to the payee of the notes collateral, from the proceeds of which application was to be made upon the indebtedness, and such application was made and it was held that the money received by the creditor would take the debt out of the statute of limitations. These cases on their facts may be distinguished from the case at bar, but even upon such facts the authorities are hopelessly divided. Those cases turn upon the question of whether the creditor, who was also the holder of the collateral, could, in any event, become the agent of the debtor and by making a payment to himself toll the statute of limitations, some of the courts holding such a payment could not be called a voluntary one, others that it could. But, as we have said, these cases are distinguishable from the situation here. The better rule would seem to be, therefore, as we have already stated, that it must clearly appear from the conveyance by the debtor to the trustees that the debtor in
This court, in Arthur & Co. v. Burke, 83 Wash. 690, 145 Pac. 974, had the question of the tolling of .the statute by partial payments before it, and held those payments must be voluntarily made under the authority of the debtor or ratified by him. The last section of the syllabus in that case states the rule as follows:
“A barred debt is not revived by part payment unless the circumstances show a clear and unequivocal intention on the part of the obligor to revive the whole debt; and assent to a revival of notes is not shown by the sale of goods and credit of the proceeds, without notice to the debtor, ten years after the notes were given. ’ ’
That case, of course, does not present the same facts as in the case at bar, but facts similar to those discussed in the Massachusetts cases, supra, where an opposite result was announced by the Massachusetts courts.
The strictness with which payments alleged to have tolled the statute are regarded by this court is indicated by the opinion in the case of Farmers & Mechanics Bank v. San Poil Consol. Co., 126 Wash. 137, 217 Pac. 707.
Under this rule it therefore becomes necessary to determine whether the agreement made by the respondents with the creditors shows “a clear and unequivocal intention” to authorize the trustees to bind the debtors to a revival of the various indebtednesses. The trust agreement itself is absolutely silent upon this question, and the only basis for an argument that there was such intention manifestly arises from the clause which we have quoted, contained only in the trust mortgage. Conceding that this clause in the mortgage is to be given effect (although a persuasive
“the language used was for the purpose of merely aiding the parties in carrying out the terms of the agreement and it is only incidental to the main purpose — the care of such property until such time as the obligation could be extinguished in full.”
We are satisfied that the notes in question were-barred, and the judgment is affirmed.